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Showing 1 results for Extinctive Prescription
Alireza Sedighi, Abolhasan Mojtahed Soleimani,
Volume 24, Issue 1 (6-2020)
Abstract
In Islamic jurisprudence, the prescription doctrine did not have much to do with the establishment or consolidation of the ownership entity. Therefore, the adoption of the law of prescription in contemporary times by the Islamic countries was largely an adaptation from the Western Law. In Iran's civil code, prescription does not have any effect on the establishment or consolidation of ownership. But the Iranian legislator in the form of public registration of property and property consolidation has inevitably benefited from the prescription doctrine of purely extinctive type. In Western law, the Acquisitive Prescription is fundamental basis for the acquisition of ownership, and as a result, today, in addition to Western countries and especially English law, the rules of the Prescription have a unique role to play in the establishment and consolidation of the ownership entity at majority of countries in the world. In this research, the role of the Prescription doctrine in the establishment and consolidation of the ownership entity was examined in a comparative manner and the important ressult is that at least in the area of property consolidation, use of Prescription doctrine is inevitable in legal system of Iran.